Business Day (Nigeria)

IFC, Microsoft partner to promote food security, agricultur­e

- By Chuka Uroko

THE Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n (IFC) and Microsoft, through its Africa Transforma­tion Office (ATO), have partnered to promote food security and agricultur­e, leveraging digital transforma­tion platforms.

The partnershi­p, which was showcased in a session during Adaptation and Agricultur­e Day at COP27 in Egypt, follows from the United Nations identifica­tion of Zero Hunger as one of its Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

This goal, according to a statement by Microsoft in Lagos, seeks to end hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainabl­e agricultur­e.

The IFC –Microsoft partnershi­p, the statement reveals, makes digital tools and training resources more accessible to small-scale farmers and agricultur­e-linked small businesses, adding that a suite of digital agricultur­e solutions has been put in place to address capacity constraint­s and inefficien­cies in the supply chain of African agribusine­sses.

“The partnershi­p is delivering digital agriculpro­vement ture products that support African agribusine­sses to strengthen food security and develop greater resilience against climate change,” says Kunle Awosika, Managing Director for Microsoft ATO.

Awosika noted that agricultur­e contribute­d about 25 percent of Africa’s GDP and 70 percent of its employment, pointing out however, that the supply chains of many agribusine­sses in Africa were fragmented and suffered from poor informatio­n flows.

He added that many farmers relied on traditiona­l agronomic practices and technologi­es that were under increasing pressure from climate-related shocks. “Digital technology can improve the operation of key supply chains in the food system through greater agricultur­al efficienci­es, improved business practices, traceabili­ty, food safety and, access to finance,” he said.

“Through the partnershi­p, digital tools such as Microsoft’s Agbot and community training applicatio­ns are integrated with IFC’S Agribusine­ss Leadership Program to provide better informatio­n, newer technologi­es, and management capacity training to agribusine­sses, farmers and cooperativ­es.

Henrik Elschner Pedersen, IFC’S Director for Manufactur­ing, Agribusine­ss and Services in Africa, pointed out that “digital technology can improve the operation of key supply chains in the food system by boosting production and improving business practices, promoting traceabili­ty and increasing access to finance.”

Pedersen noted, however, that the use of digital tools in Africa’s agricultur­e sector remains limited, often because of infrastruc­ture, affordabil­ity, awareness, and regulatory issues, adding, “IFC and Microsoft are working together to change this so that more agricultur­al players in Africa can leverage the power of the digital economy.”

Current research estimates that smallholde­r farmers account for 80 percent of the farming community, with an estimated 33 million smallholde­r farmers, but they are often hard to reach, residing in remote areas, and lack access to skills, knowledge and agricultur­al support services.

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